The Shadow in the Mirror: Cursed Reflections Arc
Setting the Stage
The bell rang as dusk crept over Ayano High. Ryo Sakamoto, age sixteen, waited outside the storage club with two old keys in his hand. These had excited him for days, since he found them in a math book bagged away in a forgotten shelf. He believed they belonged to something much more interesting than a ruined classroom.
Shira Kishibe nudged Ryo from behind. “It’s freezing. Hurry or I’m leaving you here,” she mumbled. Their third friend, Minako Takeda, trailed behind, wary. “This better not be like your ‘ghost mouse’ stunt last fall.” Ryo pulled a smile. “You trust me, don’t you? Tonight will be worth it.” The group stepped into what used to be the drama storage room; dust covered everything, but what they found among broken set pieces was new: a milky, huge Victorian mirror covered in cryptic runes and long gashes across its silver frame.
Discovery and Warnings
Ryo inspected the grime and smiled as Minako translated the jagged letters by phone-light. “It reads: Look Twice, Lose Silence.” Did that get you curious? They say old schools hide secrets, right? But Ryo had always wanted proof it was more than talk.
Shira crouched and looked for the reflection. “Doesn’t even show the ceiling right. Ugh. Below, instead of their shapes, a twisted hallway spiraled away in oily black strokes. “C’mon, let’s snap a picture,” Ryo said.
As his flash fired, a pale boy flashed back, running at the glass. None of them were alone on the other side of the world that looked like theirs, only larger and wobbling. “Did you see a face behind me?” Minako whispered. Ryo gripped his chest. “Automatic shutter glitch. Heh. Or… Are cursed objects keen on photos too?”
Rumors Come to Life
What comes next leaves the question, would you leave the mirror, or snoop for answers?
Next day, four other classmates mention dreams about being followed by a shadow. Mr. Saburo, oddball history teacher, pulls Ryo to the side. “Some relics belong hidden. Especially mirrors stolen from funerals.” Saburo admits his brother went missing in this very room months after last year’s cleanup volunteers nicked the covered mirror from a faith temple set for demolition. Shivers raced up Ryo’s back.
Ryo’s own dreams flip. Each time he sleeps, he runs locked in silence down a winding, warped school hallway—the same as that warped corridor under the glass last night. “Is it the same for everyone?” Ryo asks Minako when he meets her sleep-starved the next afternoon. She shakes her head, voice low, “My reflection breathes when I don’t. That’s not normal, right?…Or is it sick to say I kinda want to talk to it?” Their anxiety grows when the janitor mentions a cold mist will freeze into patterns any time the mirror is moved. 
The Cursed Pull
An urge grows over the next days. Shira begins to speak softer, almost too quiet. She stares into the mirror while others talk. Cut marks keep showing up on objects nearby—lockers, floor tiles, plaster wall—always in pairs. Whenever someone looks too long, chills settle under their collar. An expert, called by Mr. Saburo, inspects the glass. Grandma Yodama flatly says, “It’s not alone. What hunts for eyes hunts for fear.” She spreads old powder at each corner. “Turn it, but never let the room be empty,” sage words, plain, and heavy.
Late one Friday them, Shira stands frozen in the club room facing her doppelganger in the glass. Ryo tries to call her back but she doesn’t move. The reflection grins first. Minako throws a spare chair to break the mirror. Nothing cracks; instead, three dark bruises splash up Minako’s hand where the chair hit. The chill grows, like breath down your neck at night when alone.
Breaking Point
On Sunday, friends agree they must send the mirror back, or at least turn its hunger elsewhere. Ryo tries the odd keys—it clicks back open, subsuming its glow and runes in black ripples they can almost hear singing. Do you destroy what you fear might still call out to you? Minako hesitates, not wanting to break what once might have protected lost spirits.
Something on the other side reaches. The mirror darkens the room, drawing out oil-smudged shapes behind their reflections. Each must confess a secret aloud, breaking their silence—forgiveness draws wide scratches in hoar frost on the floor, marking answers from the spirit ready to be let go. Only then does Shira step back, and the bruises on Minako’s hand fade.
They leave the mirror with Yodama, who wraps it under white drapes and red string for blessing rites. Ryo wonders aloud, fumbling with the cold, “What would’ve happened if we hadn’t acted?”
Cliffhanger
When Ryo gets home, his phone buzzes with a message: one photo file from the earlier night reopens itself again and again, playing a film of someone behind him. The sender is blank; so is their own shadow that walks in the hallway behind, slowing to wave from inside the screen. The curse abandoned the mirror. Where will it move next?